Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 History and historiography Wier and the witch-hunts
- 2 Wier’s early years and apprenticeship (1515–1557)
- 3 Inside the labyrinth of spells The origin and development of the De Praestigiis Daemonum (1557–1568)
- 4 Between magic and science
- 5 Vince te ipsum Towards the twilight: from 1569 to 1588
- 6 Demons, sorcerers, and witches
- 7 Scepticism and toleration
- 8 Reading and refuting Wier
- Conclusion
- Bibliography (primary sources)
- Bibliography (secondary sources)
- Index
3 - Inside the labyrinth of spells The origin and development of the De Praestigiis Daemonum (1557–1568)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 History and historiography Wier and the witch-hunts
- 2 Wier’s early years and apprenticeship (1515–1557)
- 3 Inside the labyrinth of spells The origin and development of the De Praestigiis Daemonum (1557–1568)
- 4 Between magic and science
- 5 Vince te ipsum Towards the twilight: from 1569 to 1588
- 6 Demons, sorcerers, and witches
- 7 Scepticism and toleration
- 8 Reading and refuting Wier
- Conclusion
- Bibliography (primary sources)
- Bibliography (secondary sources)
- Index
Summary
Abstract
In 1563, Wier published his De praestigiis daemonum. The premises and evolution of this work is analysed in this chapter, from Wier's choice to publish in Basel to the various editions that followed, which contained significant revisions. For the first time, providing explanations based on a variety of aspects, Wier defined actions that were considered to be witchcraft as demonic tricks, and not as reality. In this early phase, he debated on what punishment should be imposed on witches with the prominent theologian Johann Brenz. The French and German translations of his work attest to the positive reception Wier's thought received.
Key words: Devil, Basel, Illusions, Witches
The De praestigiis
When faced with inexplicable events attributed to supernatural intervention, Wier, as a man of science and of culture, stressed the need to intervene. His desire was to contribute to the removal of the blanket of ignorance and to express a sense of human piety towards those who were unjustly considered witches. For many years, Wier had developed a sense of human compassion towards these women, whom he believed to be victims of demonic illusion, unjustly accused as responsible for events that they could not possibly have caused. Wier believed that in many cases it was the victim's natural disposition towards melancholy that led them to confess, a confession almost always extorted by a judge. The experience of mass demonic possession in Arnhem had opened Wier's eyes, leading him to reflect on the effects of prejudices, and from that moment on he began to collect material for inclusion in a work aimed at abolishing capital punishment for witchcraft.
The example of Wier further confirms what historians have recently shed light on: the majority of authors of treatises on demonology across the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries either held ecclesiastical offices or were individuals who, in the course of everyday life, had an experience that brought them closer to supernatural events and related trials. Direct testimony and unmediated contact with a witch became the common thread amongst many of the authors on witch-hunts. In the same way as witnessing demonic episodes, the spectacle of demonic action, which also revealed the depths of human weakness, together with a widespread fear of the imminent end of the world, awoke in these men the necessity of taking a stand in relation to the witch-hunts.
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- Information
- Johann WierDebating the Devil and Witches in Early Modern Europe, pp. 61 - 80Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022